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https://i.postimg.cc/JhsjrGD0/BBUTLU7.jpg
https://i.postimg.cc/mrKCtBCw/BBUTUzQ.jpg https://i.postimg.cc/9fwq3KKq/BBUTOhl.jpg https://i.postimg.cc/pTtrwTKg/BBUTDVN.jpg Nebraska floods have broken records in 17 places across the state |
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https://i.postimg.cc/Jh8WmBdc/BBUQSyB.jpg Ford's Shelby Mustang in Grabber Lime |
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Purpose-built missile transport vehicle. It was built by GMC to haul the missile (minus the warhead) from the manufacturing facility to the silo site, powered by the GMC 702" V12 gas engine. |
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ABQ, NM - Rte 66 - right after a thunderstorm had hit. You can see it in the background |
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Sunrise and just prior to sunrise from 36,000 feet altitude. I took this photograph Friday morning March 8th on my way to Ft Lauderdale Florida airport from Cleveland, Oh. on a United 737.
Rich |
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1963 426 Max Wedge Plymouth Savoy
http://s26.postimg.cc/s603542uh/screenshot_1235.png http://s26.postimg.cc/ppy9r9krt/image.jpg On June 1, 1963 Chrysler released it's new 426 CI Max Wedge due to a rule change by both the NHRA and NASCAR raising the cubic inch limit to 427. The 426 Max Wedge option was a complete package which consisted of either the 415 HP (11:1 Compression) or the 425 HP (13.5:1 Compression), HD 3 Speed Torqueflite Auto Trans and 3.91 gears in a Sure-Grip HD rear. Other standard features were a dual point distributor, "Laker" exhaust cutouts, 10" drum brakes and deep groove pulleys. These cars were very capable of hitting high 12s with open exhaust and a set of slicks. The 415 HP model could be driven on the street (with limited success due to the cross-ram intake manifold which was designed to work at 4000+ RPM) using Sunoco 260 but the 425 HP version required racing fuel (110+ octane) Due to the late introduction date, only 18 426/415 HP Max Wedge Auto Trans Plymouth Savoys were produced. It may look like a "big car" but it isn't. With the setup you see, it weighs about 3350 lbs. |
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One of the 1966 Hemi 4 Door Coronets. Don Garlits owns a white one. There's a red one that has shown up at a few auctions. And I think there is a 4th overseas (Sweden?) |
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Yes, sundaes did actually get their name from the best day of the week. In the 1890s, a few states passed laws prohibiting the sale or consumption of ice cream sodas on Sundays: it was considered immoral and improper for religious reasons. But ice cream lovers found a loophole: simply serve ice cream with toppings. The dessert came to be known as the Sunday and, eventually, the sundae. |
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The football huddle was started in 1890 at a deaf university where the players needed to be able to sign plays to each other (in American Sign Language) without the other team being able to see what was going on. From then, it caught on across teams because it provided a close-knit space where the players could speak quietly and account for all present, bolstering team spirit. |
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Gates Joins Bezos as the Only Two Members of the $100 Billion Club |
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